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Sea Power and Maritime Affairs

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Title: Sea Power and Maritime Affairs


1
Sea Power and Maritime Affairs
  • Lesson 12 Naval Strategy and National Policy,
  • 1919-1941

2
German High Seas Fleet
  • Armistice of 11 November 1918
  • High Seas Fleet undefeated in battle
  • Germany must surrender most of its ships to
    Allies
  • High Seas Fleet interned at Scapa Flow
  • Fleet scuttled by German naval officers on 21
    June 1919 due to fear of resumption of war
  • During negotiations of Treaty of Versailles
  • Great Britain and France require Germany to
    relinquish control of the rest of its Navy

3
German Battleship Bayern Scuttled at Scapa
Flow - 21 June 1919
4
Treaty of Versailles -- 1919
  • U.S. President Woodrow Wilson
  • Attempts to use U.S. power to ensure peace in
    Europe
  • Germany
  • Forced to follow military limitations and pay
    reparations
  • Wilson's Fourteen Points
  • Second Point
  • Freedom of the seas and illegality of blockades
  • British opposition
  • Self-Determination for European peoples
  • League of Nations Republican U.S. Senate
    rejects due to isolationist sentiments

5
The British Royal Navy
  • Several desires for the Royal Navy
  • Maintain naval predominance in the face of the
    challenge from the U.S. Navy
  • Avoid a naval construction race with the U.S.
    Navy
  • Destruction of the German High Seas Fleet
  • Opposed Wilson's principle of freedom of the seas
  • Advantage of dominant fleet would be relinquished
  • Attempted to deter the U.S. from adopting a large
    building program

6
The Japanese Imperial Navy
  • Seized German Pacific possessions early in WW I
  • Island groups in central Pacific
  • Chinese port facilities
  • Engaged in a major naval building program
  • Designed to give Japan naval dominance in the
    western Pacific to protect expansion
  • Cannot afford an arms race with U.S.
  • Insufficient resources and capabilities

7
The U.S. Navy
  • Woodrow Wilson
  • Opposes British rejection of Second of the
    Fourteen Points
  • Major naval building program begins - 1919
  • Naval Act of 1916 continued and expanded
  • Emphasis back on capital ships
  • Need for a large fleet to protect both coasts
  • Construction planned to rival and eclipse the
    Royal Navy
  • American people seek a Return to Normalcy
  • Do not support a Navy second to none
  • Republican Congress supports disarmament
  • Republican President Warren G. Harding elected in
    1920
  • Wilsons building program disapproved

8
Washington Naval Conference -- 1921-22
  • Issues for U.S.
  • Security of possessions in the Pacific
  • Dislike of Anglo-Japanese Alliance of
    1902 (Potential threat to U.S. interests in the
    Far East)
  • End to the naval arms race
  • Secretary of State Charles Evans Hughes
  • Dramatic proposal for disarmament
  • Immediate 10-year Holiday on construction of
    new capital ships
  • Scrapping of ships already commissioned
  • Designed for appeasement of Congress (Determined
    to cut military spending after WW I)

9
Washington Naval Conference
10
Five Power Naval Limitation Treaty
  • U.S., Britain, Japan, France, Italy
  • Capital ship tonnage ratio of 5-5-3-1.7-1.7
  • Limits on displacement and caliber of guns on
    capital ships
  • No limit to cruisers, destroyers, submarines
  • Non-fortification of Pacific possessions

11
Effects of the Five Power Treaty
12
Other Treaties
  • Four-Power Pact
  • U.S., Great Britain, Japan, and France
  • Terminates the Anglo-Japanese Alliance of 1902
  • Respect Far Eastern possessions of other
    countries
  • Mutual consultation in crisis
  • Nine-Power Treaty
  • U.S., Great Britain, Japan, France, Italy, China,
    Belgium, the Netherlands, and Portugal
  • Guarantees Open Door in China
  • Freedom of trade for all countries

13
Treaty Implications to U.S.
  • Negative
  • Japanese angered by limits on their expansion
  • Smaller classes of ships not included
  • Did not recognize that U.S. and Great Britain
    were no longer rivals
  • Positive
  • Ensure Open Door in China
  • Naval limitations realistically accepted
    congressional budget limitations
  • U.S. Navy able to develop new technology

14
Technological Improvements
  • Battleship Backbone of the Fleet- very Mahanian!
  • Conversion from coal to oil fuel source for
    engines
  • Underway replenishment much easier to accomplish
  • Aircraft carriers Attack and fighter aircraft
    developed
  • Slow integration into the fleet
  • Army General Billy Mitchell Navies are obsolete
  • Carriers still seen as support for battleships
  • Lexington and Saratoga - Converted battle
    cruisers
  • Ranger - 1934 - First carrier built from the keel
    up

15
  • Modern radio communications
  • Submarines - Ability to fire torpedoes submerged
  • Made scout for fleet ban unrestricted submarine
    warfare
  • Aluminum and plastic reduce weight and increase
    speed

16
USS Langley (CV 1)
  • - First U.S. Navy aircraft carrier.

17
U.S. Amphibious Doctrine
  • Focus on Japanese-controlled island groups in the
    Pacific.
  • Major Earl H. Pete Ellis, USMC
  • Assigned by General Lejeune to develop plans for
    Marine operations in support of War Plan Orange
  • Advanced Base Operations in Micronesia approved
    1921
  • Necessary to seize and defend advanced naval
    bases
  • Need the ability to perform opposed amphibious
    assaults
  • Special landing craft and heavy weapons needed
  • Incorporated lessons from Gallipoli on proper
    planning
  • Ellis is killed on Palau in 1923 while studying
    islands
  • General Lejeune
  • Marine Corps exists to perform missions with the
    fleet

18
Amphibious Doctrine
  • Necessity of detailed and exact planning of all
    aspects of the operation
  • Need for careful briefing of all participants
  • The value of surprise
  • Desirability of speed in exploiting any advantage
    won
  • Ship bombardment must be supplemented by close
    support of ground units by aircraft used as
    flying artillery
  • Supply vessels must be combat-loaded and vital
    stores must be distributed among supply ships to
    avoid bottleneck with loss of one ship

19
Geneva Conference of 1927
  • U.S. hopes to extend 5-5-3 ratio to cruisers
  • Different types of ships
  • U.S. -- fewer, bigger cruisers
  • Britain -- more, smaller cruisers
  • Britain, France and Japan oppose limits
  • No agreement is reached

20
London Conference of 1930
  • Cruisers reclassified
  • Heavy 6.1 guns
  • Light
  • U.S., Britain, Japan, France, and Italy
  • Results
  • U.S.-British parity in all types of vessels
  • Increased Japanese ratio in cruisers and
    destroyers to 10107
  • Japanese parity in submarines
  • France and Italy do not participate
  • Ban on new capital ships extended until 1936

21
Fascismin Europe
  • Mussolini - Il Duce 1922
  • Invasion of Ethiopia - 1935
  • Hitler - Fuhrer Chancellor of Germany - 1933
  • Nazi Third Reich replaces Weimar Republic
  • Promise of German economic recovery
  • Beginnings of the Holocaust
  • German rearmament begins
  • Spanish Civil War - 1930s
  • Generalissimo Francisco Franco supported by
    fascists
  • Agreement permits Germany to rebuild Navy - 1935
  • Remilitarization of the Rhineland - 1936
  • German rejection of the Treaty of Versailles

22
Fascism
  • General traits
  • Rejection of individualism
  • Rejection of representative government
  • Idealization of war
  • Disallowance of the class struggle
    (anti-communist)
  • Unity and indivisibility of the nation
  • Military build-up
  • Territorial expansion
  • Rome-Berlin Axis - 1936
  • Tripartite Pact Germany, Italy, Japan - 1940
  • Mutual support if one party is attacked by a
    power not already involved -- Soviet Union

23
Il Duce
  • Benito
  • Mussolini

24
Adolf Hitler
  • Fuhrer

25
Japanese Imperialism
  • Expansion - Natural Resources
  • Formosa (Taiwan) - Annexed 1895
  • Korea- Protectorate 1905, Annexed 1910
  • Invasion of Manchuria 1931
  • Non-recognition doctrine-President Hoover
  • Beginning of Japanese expansion into China,
    leading to WWII

26
Hirohito
  • Emperor of Japan
  • World War II

27
(No Transcript)
28
Other Conferences
  • Geneva Conference of 1932
  • Complete failure
  • Japan resists
  • Invasion of Manchuria
  • France resists
  • Hitler and Nazi party emerging in Germany
  • Second London Naval Conference of 1936
  • Britain already allows Germany 35 of tonnage and
    parity in submarines - 1935 agreement
  • Mild limitations on size of naval craft proposed
  • Italy and Japan do not sign
  • Effective end of naval limitations

29
Depression and the U.S. Navy
  • British attempt appeasement, including pact
    permitting Germany to rebuild Navy
  • Strong support of isolationism in U.S. public and
    Congress.
  • Neutrality Acts 1935-37
  • Renounce U.S. neutral rights (1812, 1917)
  • 1935 Sale or transport of munitions prohibited
  • 1936 Loans prohibited
  • 1937 Cash and carrypolicy enforce
  • 1939 Embargo lifted, but President can prohibit
    American ships from entering danger zones
  • 1936 U.S. budget cuts - Reductions in naval
    spending
  • Japanese Imperial Navy -- Large build-up begins
    in 1936
  • Stress on importance of aircraft carriers to the
    fleet

30
War Plan Orange Rainbow Plans
  • Scenario U.S. and Japan at war in the Pacific
  • Attempt to hold Philippines
  • Build up naval forces in Hawaii
  • Offensive across the Pacific
  • Amphibious operations to seize advanced naval
    bases
  • Defeat Japanese Navy in a fleet engagement
  • Recapture Philippines
  • Threaten Japanese Home Islands with naval
    forces
  • Open Door -- Maintain territorial integrity of
    China
  • Guam and Philippines -- remain relatively
    unfortified
  • 1922 Five Power Naval Limitation Treaty
  • Japanese Islands Marshalls, Marianas, and
    Carolines

31
U.S. Fleet
  • Majority of U.S. Fleet based in the Pacific
  • Pacific Fleet moves to Pearl Harbor - 1940
  • Battleships - Capital ships of the fleet
  • Aircraft Carriers - Fleet Exercises demonstrate
    potential
  • USS Lexington (CV 2)
  • USS Saratoga (CV 3)
  • USS Ranger (CV 4)
  • USS Yorktown (CV 5)
  • USS Enterprise (CV 6)
  • USS Wasp (CV 7)
  • USS Hornet (CV 8)
  • Submarines

32
Japanese Imperialism in Asia
  • Undeclared War with China - 1937
  • Shanghai Incident
  • USS Panay sunk on Yangtze River
  • Chiang Kai-shek and Mao Tse-tung
  • Occupation of French Indochina - 1940
  • Embargo of oil and other natural resources - July
    1941
  • U.S., Great Britain, and the Netherlands
  • General Tojo Military government installed -
    October 1941

33
USS Panay Incident
  • Yangtze River Patrol, China
  • Sunk by Japanese naval aircraft on 12 December
    1937

34
U.S. Options
  • Military intervention
  • Economic sanctions
  • Joint military and economic moves with Britain
  • Indirect response

35
U.S. Response
  • FDRs quarantine speech called for positive
    endeavors to preserve peace.
  • Not effectivelack of popular support
  • Did not impose Neutrality Act
  • Hurt China more than Japan
  • No joint action with Britain disagreements
  • Indirect response
  • 1938 Naval Expansion Act-ships not avail until
    40-41
  • Lesson A COUNTRY CANNOT EXERT FORCE WITHOUT THE
    MILITARY FORCE TO BACK IT UP!

36
Force Level of U.S. Fleet 1937
  • Manning
  • Navy officers and enlisted 113,617
  • Marine officers and enlisted 18, 223
  • Fleet
  • Battleships 15
  • Aircraft Carriers 3
  • Heavy cruisers 17
  • Light cruisers 10
  • Destroyers 196 (162 overage)
  • Subs 81 (50 overage)

37
Force Level of U.S. Fleet 1937
  • Strategic disposition
  • Pacific Coast Main U.S. battle fleet at Pearl
  • Atlantic Training squadron
  • Asia Asiatic fleet 2-CAs, 13-DDs, 6-SS, 10
    gunboats
  • Panama Service squadron 1-DD, 2 gunboats, 6-SS
  • Europe 1-CA, 2-DD
  • Most probable enemy Japan
  • strategy, War Plan Orange

38
Retreat Toward Hemispheric Defense
  • Impracticality of War Plan Orange
  • Did not have strength to hold Philippines while
    the Navy fought its way across the Pacific
  • Lack of forward bases
  • Guam, Wake, Midway, Samoa, and Philippines not
    fortified for fear of provoking Japan
  • Crisis in Far East overshadowed by events in
    Europe
  • Threat from both directions put U.S. in a
    defensive frame of mind
  • American people were reluctant to become
    entangled in the deteriorating condition of Europe

39
  • Army-Navy conflicts concerning defensive roles
    and competition for defense money
  • Leads to increased role of air power to protect
    approaches to the Americas
  • European Commitments
  • Restrict British cooperation for aggressive
    Pacific defenses
  • U.S. fleet divided between Atlantic and Pacific

40
  • Revisions to strategic planning
  • Emphasis shifted from Pacific to Atlantic
  • Security of Caribbean and Panama have top
    priority (sacrificing Philippines and Guam)
  • Defensive strategy in Pacific in short run as
    opposed to War Plan Orange, which envisioned
    early offensive
  • War Plan Orange went through many mutations
  • Eventually evolved into Rainbow plans

41
  • Ultimately envisioned a war between the U.S. and
    Japan
  • U.S. would lose the Philippines at an early stage
  • Fall back to the Hawaiian Islands
  • Reinforce the battle fleet in Hawaii
  • Move West to recapture Philippines
  • Eventually threaten the Japanese home islands
    after defeating Japanese fleet in detail
  • The Rainbow War Plans

42
Navys Ability to Carry out Plans
  • Enough capital ships offensive in Atlantic and
    defensive in Pacific
  • Insufficient aircraft carriers
  • Barely sufficient cruisers
  • Submarines 40 below war strength
  • Aircraft
  • Shortage of long-range patrol bombers
  • Lack of modern carrier aircraft
  • Landing Craft
  • Woefully inadequate in numbers

43
  • Manpower
  • Enlisted personnel afloat at 78 of prescribed
    manning
  • Bases critical deficiencies
  • Patrol plane bases needed at Oahu, Midway,
    Johnston, Palmyra, Wake, and Puerto Rico
  • Advance fleet bases required in Trinidad, Brazil,
    West Africa, Guam, Wake, and East Indies
  • Marine Corps
  • 1/3 of desired strength
  • Conclusion Not fully prepared!!!
  • Result Navy Expansion Act (May 1938)

44
Europes Events
  • German annexation of Austria (Anschluss) - March
    1938
  • Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact - August 1939
  • Non-aggression treaty between Soviet Union and
    Germany
  • Munich Crisis - September 1938
  • Czechoslovakias German-speaking Sudetenland
  • Appeasement of Hitler by Western leaders.
  • British Prime Minister Chamberlain Peace in
    our time.
  • German occupation of Czechoslovakia - March 1939
  • Italian occupation of Albania - April 1939
  • Guarantee of protection of Poland Britain and
    France
  • March 1939 (Also Holland and Belgium.)

45
Developments
  • Amphibious doctrine (see earlier slide)
  • Specially designed landing craft necessary
  • Logistics doctrine
  • Need for advanced bases
  • ?Seabees
  • Resupply
  • Need extensive support by seaborne supply
    oilers, tenders, repair ships, floating drydocks,
    ammunition carriers, etc
  • Service Force gave fleet the necessary 6,000 mile
    operating range required for a campaign in the
    Pacific

46
JosefStalin
  • Secretary General
  • of the
  • Communist Party
  • Union of Soviet
  • Socialist Republics
  • World War II

47
War in Europe
  • Invasion of Poland Blitzkrieg - September 1939
  • Tanks and Stuka dive bombers
  • Soviet occupation of eastern Poland
  • Denmark and Norway - April 1940
  • May 1940 - Invasion of Netherlands, Belgium, and
    France
  • Maginot Line proves ineffective to maneuver
    warfare
  • Battle of Britain - Summer 1940
  • Operation Sea Lion - planned German invasion of
    England
  • Soviet annexation of Baltic States June 1940
  • Soviet invasion of Finland - November 1940
  • German invasion of Soviet Union - June 1941
  • Operation Barbarossa

48
WinstonChurchill
  • Prime Minister
  • of
  • Great Britain
  • World War II

49
  • we shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on
    the landing grounds, we shall fight in the fields
    and in the streets, we shall fight in the hills
    we shall never surrender
  • Winston Churchill
  • - June 4, 1940

50
Unterseeboote -- U-boat
51
German Commerce Raiding
  • Ineffective until German invasions of Norway,
    Denmark, and France
  • Allows German access to Atlantic ports
  • German surface raiders target Allied shipping
  • Battle of the River Plate - December 1939
  • Admiral Graf Spee scuttled
  • Bismarck sunk - May 1941
  • U-boats
  • Commanded by Admiral Karl Donitz
  • HF Radio used to organize Wolfpacks - groups
    of U-boats that attack Allied convoys

52
Naval Action 1939-1941
  • Royal Navy blockades Germany
  • German invasion of Norway - April 1940
  • Avoid Royal Navy mining of lines of communication
  • Dunkirk (Dunkerque) - May, June 1940
  • Royal Navy evacuates 337,000 Allied soldiers from
    France
  • British destroy Vichy French fleet at Oran- July
    1940
  • U.S. Navy Neutrality Patrols become the Atlantic
    Fleet
  • Admiral Ernest J. King in command
  • Undeclared naval war in the Atlantic against
    U-boats
  • Destroyers escort convoys
  • Anti-submarine patrol aircraft used to locate
    U-boats

53
Battle of the Atlantic - 1941
  • Britain dependent on merchant shipping for food
    supply
  • Importance of maintaining lines of communication
    between Great Britain and the U.S
  • Increased number of U-boats and ease of transit
    to Atlantic
  • Wolfpacks used to attack Allied convoys
  • Gap in anti-submarine aircraft coverage south of
    Greenland
  • Happy Time for German U-boats
  • Heavy losses of Allied merchant ships 1940 - 1941
  • Britain acquires more escorts and better ability
    to break the secret Ultra code used by the
    German armed forces
  • U.S. participates in convoy escort
  • Allied losses begin to decrease in late 1941

54
War in Europe, Sept 1939Effects on U.S.
  • Neutrality Patrols
  • Report and track belligerent forces approaching
    the U.S.
  • Britain made facilities available Bermuda, St.
    Lucia, Trinidad
  • Fourth Neutrality Act (1939)- Shift from
    isolationism
  • Arms embargo lifted
  • U.S. ships forbidden to enter danger zones
  • Belligerents had to pay cash for munitions and
    pick them up with their ships (Cash and Carry)

55
  • The Declaration of Panama
  • 300 mile neutrality zone around Americas
  • Compromised by Britains long-range blockade of
    Germany and Germanys counter blockade of Allied
    coast
  • Violated by Battle of River Plate
  • New opportunities for Japan
  • Reduced British participation in Far Eastern
    affairs
  • Reduced threat of Russian intervention
  • Increased vulnerability of French and Dutch
    possessions
  • Distraction of U.S. interest and forces from the
    area

56
  • The Fall of France and isolation of Britain
  • Shocked American isolationists into realizing
    vulnerability of U.S.
  • Rearmament Authorize two-ocean Navy
  • Not to be completed until 1946

57
War in Europe, Sept 1939Effects on U.S.
  • All aid to Britain short of War
  • Destroyers for bases deal
  • 50 overage destroyers for 99-year leases on bases
    in Bahamas, Jamaica and Newfoundland
  • Lend-Lease to Britain and Russia
  • American Occupation of Greenland/Iceland
  • American escort of convoy and eventual co-op in
    hunting down U-boats
  • Torpedoing of the Greer, Kearney and Reuben James

58
FranklinDelanoRoosevelt
  • President
  • of the
  • United States
  • World War II

59
Preparations for war in the Pacific
  • Rainbow II
  • U.S. fleet kept in Pearl Harbor as deterrent to
    Japan
  • U.S. refused to send forces to Singapore
  • Shift in Strategy from Rainbow II to Atlantic
    First
  • Strong offensive in Atlantic, Defensive in
    Pacific
  • Defeat Germany and Italy first, then Japan
  • Support Brit forces in East Indies, and defend
    Midway, Johnson, Palmyra, Samoa, and Guam
  • Defend Philippines as long as possible then
    withdraw to Malay barrier

60
Political Developments
  • Leading to the War in the Pacific
  • 26 Jul 1940 Embargo on aviation fuel and high
    grade scrap
  • Sept 1940 Japan joins Axis
  • 13 Apr 1941 Japan signs 5 year neutrality treaty
    with Russia
  • Jun 1941 Japan forces French to turn over bases
    in S. Indochina
  • 26 Jul 1941 U.S. freezes all Jap assets and cuts
    of oil
  • Decision to fortify and defend the Philippines
    (top priority)
  • Oct 1941 Tojo/War party takes political control
    of govt
  • Japan sends last proposals
  • 26 Nov 1941 U.S. responds with demand for Jap
    withdrawal from China and Indochina
  • 6 Dec 1941 Roosevelt personally appeals to Emp
    Hirohito for withdrawal. Answered 0755 next
    morning Pearl Harbor

61
Discussion
Next time War in the Atlantic, North Africa, and
the Mediterranean, 1935-1945
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